Heterogeneous Hydroxyl Radical Oxidation of Isoprene-Epoxydiol-Derived Methyltetrol Sulfates: Plausible Formation Mechanisms of Previously Unexplained Organosulfates in Ambient Fine Aerosols
Yuzhi Chen, Yue Zhang, Andrew T. Lambe, Rongshuang Xu, Ziying Lei, Nicole E. Olson, Zhenfa Zhang, Tessa Szalkowski, Tianqu Cui, William Vizuete, Avram Gold, Barbara J. Turpin, Andrew P. Ault, Man Nin Chan, Jason D. Surratt
Abstract
Methyltetrol sulfates are unique tracers for secondary organic aerosols (SOA) formed from acid-driven multiphase chemistry of isoprene-derived epoxydiols. 2-Methyltetrol sulfate diastereomers (2-MTSs) are the dominant isomers and single most-abundant SOA tracers in atmospheric fine particulate matter (PM2.5), but their atmospheric sinks remain unknown. We investigated the oxidative aging of authentic 2-MTS aerosols by gas-phase hydroxyl radicals (•OH) at a relative humidity of 61 ± 1%. The effective rate constant for this heterogeneous reaction was determined as 4.9 ± 0.6 × 10–13 cm3 molecules–1 s–1, corresponding to an atmospheric lifetime of 16 ± 2 days (assuming an •OH concentration of 1.5 × 106 molecules cm–3). Chemical changes to 2-MTSs were monitored by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography interfaced to electrospray ionization high-resolution quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (HILIC/ESI-HR-QTOFMS). Plausible reaction mechanisms are proposed for previously unknown OSs detected in atmospheric PM2.5 at mass-to-charge ratios (m/z) of 139 (C2H3O5S–), 155 (C2H3O6S–), 169 (C3H5O6S–), 171 (C3H7O6S–), 185 (C3H5O7S–), 199 (C4H7O7S–), 211 (C5H7O7S–), 213 (C5H9O7S–), 227 (C5H7O8S–), 229 (C5H9O8S–), and 231 (C5H11O8S–). Heterogeneous •OH oxidation of 2-MTSs redistributes the particulate sulfur speciation into more oxygenated/functionalized OSs, likely modifying the aerosol physicochemical properties of SOA containing 2-MTSs.